Week 1 Journal Feedback

Thank you for submitting your assignment on time.

There are a few of things that you need to fix on your individual user page and shared journal page. Please make these changes by next week's journal deadline (midnight, February 8) to earn back the points you missed on this assignment.

Make sure that you use the summary field to record what you changed every time you make a change.

You have created your template, but you actually need to invoke it on your user page so that the stuff that is in there actually shows up on your page. You do this by using the syntax {{Ashley Rhoades}} at the place where you want it to appear.

On the Week 1 shared journal page, On the Week 1 shared journal page, make a link back to your user page at the top of the section where you answered the questions.

A pair of engineers are riding around in a hot air balloon, and they get lost. Searching for help, they see a crowd in a nearby field, and they maneuver close enough to talk. They yell down "Hey, where are we?"

A long conversation ensues amongst the group, and after quite a time, one of the ground group yells up "You're in a hot air balloon."

One engineer says to the other "just our luck. mathematicians."
The other says "how do you know," and the first responds, "three reasons.

1. They took forever to answer.
2. The answer was perfectly accurate.
3. The answer was absolutely useless."

Another has a group of engineers and a group of mathematicians sitting near each other on a train trip. The engineers note that the mathematicians only have one ticket among the group members, and they ask about it. The mathematicians say "we have worked hard to optimize our cost, and we have a traveling algorithm that only requires one ticket. You'll see."

At some point in the trip, the conductor calls "Tickets!" from up the car. The mathematicians run together to the bathroom and enter together. When the conductor knocks on the bathroom door, the mathematicians slide the ticket under it. The engineers, impressed, take note of this occurrence.

On the trip back, the two groups are again sitting together, the engineers proudly displaying their one ticket. The mathematicians remark that they have improved their algorithm, needing no ticket now. Hmm... so, the conductor calls for "Tickets!" and the engineers scramble to the loo. Soon as the door closes, the mathematicians follow, one of which knocks on the door and says "Ticket!"